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ALBANY, N.Y. (CBSNewYork/AP) - State inspections found children isolated in closets, subjected to corporal punishment and humiliated in New York day care centers that saw little state oversight and enforcement, according to a report released Thursday by the state Senate’s Independent Democratic Conference.

The IDC called its findings “shocking” after reviewing more than 1,000 state reports – although most cases involved lesser violations including failure to take certain precautions, leaving children unattended and unlicensed operation.

“This report took one portion of our regulatory program out of context and is alarmingly misleading for parents in this state,” said Jennifer Givner, spokeswoman for the state Office of Children and Family Services. “The health and safety of New York state’s more than 500,000 children in child care is paramount to OCFS and we have a rigorous inspection and enforcement process to hold providers accountable for compliance.”

The Bronx-Westchester senator and the rest of the IDC are proposing legislation that would require all day care centers to post their latest inspection reports at the center and online so parents can see them. The senators who share majority control of the Senate with Republicans also call for greater enforcement by the state Office of Children and Family Services and for the state to reevaluate the quality and availability of day care statewide.

“Posting the latest inspection report at the entrance of every day care center will get these operators to clean up their act,” said Sen. Diane Savino, a Staten Island-Brooklyn Democrat.

Sen. David Carlucci of Rockland-Westchester called it appalling behavior by too many day care centers “racking up thousands of gross violations and doing so without any fear of repercussions.”

The IDC’s examination of 1,584 state reports found hundreds of day care centers with multiple violations in the last 24 months. The Senate IDC claims only a small number of centers with multiple violations have been held accountable by the Cuomo administration.

The Office of Children and Family Services employs more than 400 health and safety inspectors. Givner said serious violations or repeated violations can result in immediate suspension or license revocation. She said the state office has an online database that helps parents compare day care centers.

“Parents need to be able to trust the people who care for their children,” said Sen. David Valesky of Oneida.